Newspaper Page Text
* •FARTHEST WEST NEWSPAPER IN THE 50 STATES” 64th Year No. 102 NOME, ALASKA, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1963 Per Copy 15<? Plane Wreckage Spotted in Rugged Mountain Area ANCHORAGE UP — Wreckage sighted in the remote and rugged mountains of the Alaska Range near Skwentna was being investi gated today as the possible remains of a twin-engine plane which car ried seven U.S. Weather Bureau officials to their deaths in 1960. The wreckage was sighted Sat urday by Howard Fowler, an An chorage pilot, while on a hunting trip in the area some 75 miles northwest of Anchorage. An Air Force helicopter, carrying Federal Aviation Agency repre sentatives, a State Police trooper and Fowler, left Elmendorf AFB for the sight today. The FAA said Fowler reported the wreckage appeared to be that of a plane that had smacked into the side of a mountain. The seven Weather Bureau offi cials vanished July 25, 1960, after leaving Anchorage in a twin-en gined Beechcraft bound for Nome and Kotzebue. The plane vanished from the radar scope at Anchorage when it was about 140 miles northwest of here, heading into the mountain ous area wrhere peaks rise as high as 10,000 feet. The men were on a four-day trip to Nome and Kotzebue to in spect Weather Bureau facilities here. The missing men included five Anchorage Weather Bureau em ployes — W. B. Lindley, Harry C. Carle, James W. <Bill> Grant, Charles Belcher and Thomas O. McDonald. The Weather Bureau’s chief test pilot, George Brewster of Wash ington, D.C., was at the controls. The seventh man aboard the craft was Walter Branstetter of Everett, Wn., a Weather Bureau employe assigned to the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization. Russia Will Release Jailed Japanese Fishermen TOKYO UP* — The Soviet Union announced today that all Japanese fishermen jailed by the Russians on charges of poaching will be realeased soon. Soviet Ambassador Vladimir M. Vinogradov conveyed, the news to the Foreign Ministry, then called a news conference at the Soviet Embassy to make the announce ment public. The move was regarded by Japanese officials and newspapers as part of the Soviet Union’s cur rent peaceful coexistence line. By Japanese count, there are 117 Japanese fishermen under So viet detention, and 330 boats. The Russian announcement made no mention of returning the ships. CREATOR OF THE JEEP KARL PROBST FOUND DEAD DAYTON, Ohio UP* — Karl K. Probst, 79, creator of the Jeep, was found dead at his home Sun day of an apparent overdose of sleeping pills. He had been ill for several weeks. Plans for the Jeep, which he drew in 1940 as a consulting en gineer for the Bantam Car Co. of Butler, Pa., were found at his bed side. The vehicle that became famous during World War II was designed by Probst in one week. In 1941 Willys-Overland and the Ford Motor Co. disputed the vehicle’s origins, but a Federal Trade Com mission ruling said Probst was the designer. Dynamite Explosion Causes Extensive Damage In Butte, Mont., Area BUTTE, Mont, — The identity of the man or men killed in an ex plosion of a load of dynamite was unknown today in the confused aftermath of the blast which caused thousands of dollars’ damage in the Butte area. Sheriff Bill Dalling’s office has given no detailed account of the incident because of confusion on certain points and official si lence on others. Dalling’s deputies, staked out near the blast scene Saturday night, were moving in to make arrests when the explosion occur red. No deputies were injured seriously. Human remains were so frag mented and scattered over such a large area by the blast that au thorities found it difficult to de termine the number of casualties. Deputy sheriff Ken Cunning ham and a fellow officer were about 130 feet away and approach ing three parked cars and the truck when the dynamite blew up. Both officers were cut and bruised but escaped serious injury. State’s Salmon Pack Far Short of 1962 JUNEAU UP) — The state’s 1963 salmon pack climbed to 2,420,442 cases during the week ending Aug. 18 but was still far short of the 1962 pack, the Fish and Game De partment reported today. The pack through Aug. 19 of Iasi year was 3,056,309 cases. Central Alaska led the state in the number of cases packed, with 1,121,676. including 653,412 cases of pinks and 228,855 cases of chums. Southeast Alaska’s total through Aug. 18 was 1,008,323 cases, in cluding 834,570 cases of pinks. Western Alaska had an ex tremely small pack of 290,443 cases, including 218,306 cases of reds. By specie, the total state pack included 38,703 cases of kings, 464,719 cases of reds, 56,297 cases of cohos, 1,488,492 cases of pinks and 372,231 cases of chums. High School Band Director Robs Two Banks JACKSON, Mo. UP) — The di rector of the Jackson High School Band admitted Friday he robbed two banks in nearby communities of more than $20,000. He was ar rested after witnesses identified him at a concert he was conduct ing. Richard Burton Partridge, 38, signed statements that he robbed the Bank of Advance, Mo., of $9, 637 on Oct. 15 last year and the Chaffee, Mo., bank of $12,780 on Aug. 5. Partridge was charged in a fed eral complaint and held in lieu of $60,000 bond. “He sure fooled a lot of people,’’ said Norman Swan, director of the Jackson Consolidated School Dist. “He did a good job of directing the band and was popular.” Both banks are within 30 miles from the Partridge home in south east Missouri. None of the money taken in the first robbery has been recovered, police said, but more than $7,000 of the Chaffee money was found in a strong box at the high school. Two pistols also were in the box. A white station wagon used in the Chafee robbery led to the ar rest. Police learned Partridge had such a car and found it hidden in a bam. Russian Fishing Vessel Sinks after Razed by Fire BOSTON (#> — An engine room fire which started up again after ! a Russian fishing vessel fought the I blaze and reported it controlled, today resulted in the sinking of the Gloucester fishing craft, St. Nic holas. The eight-man crew, unhanned, had been taken aboard another American fishing vessel, the Holy Cross, after the St. Nicholas crew men radioed they lacked fire fight ing equipment and could not con trol the flames. Meanwhile, the Coast Guard cutter Snohomish sped to the scene. The Snohomish took the crewmen from the Holy Cross be fore proceeding. The cutter sub sequently found the Gloucester craft again in flames. It began fighting the fire but reported the St. Nicholas sank at 8:05 a.m. Astronauts Will Sell Personal Stories on the Man-to-the-Moon Program WASHINGTON UP> — Negotia tions are under way for the sale of the personal stories of the 16 Gemini-Apollo astronauts of the U.S. man-to-the-moon program to Life magazine. A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration said a contract with Life “is cooking.” “It is not yet signed, but I think we will have a contract — I don’t know what could fall through at this stage,” the spokesman said. In New York Edward Thompson, the magazine’s editor, said, “we are still dickering.” Thompson added that there probably will be two contracts, “one with us,” and one with another party for other rights. Unearth Gold Coins SALEM, Ohio UP) — “It got dark and we had to quit. We plan to go back and dig some more.” That’s what Mrs. Owen Glass burn, a minister’s wife, said after a crock containing gold coins with a face value of $655 was unearth ed Friday on her husband’s prop erty here. The coins — $5, $10 and $20 de nominations — were found with the aid of a bulldozer belonging to a neighbor who rents the prop erty. The coins were in a rusty metal box inside a crock, which was about a foot underground. “The book price of the coins is a minimum of $2,175,” said Mrs. Glassburn, a coin collector. “The oldest coin is a $20 gold piece dated 1905.” N.Y. Stock Exchange Against Proposed Tax WASHINGTON UP> — The New York Stock Exchange says a pro posed tax on some U.S. invest ments overseas is a departure from this country’s long-standing policy of encouraging free international money markets. Such a change in policy could conceivably lead to a weakening of New York and the United States as the financial capital of the world,” the exchange said in a statement filed with the House Ways and Means Committee. The committee is considering legislation to impose a tax on cer tain foreign investments as a meas ure designed to discourage the flow of U.S. capital abroad. The New York Exchange said that, in any event, the tax should not be applied to present invest ments. Senate Approves to Extend $75 Million a Year Federal Aid to Airports WASHINGTON fa — The Sen ate passed tcxiay the administra tion’s bill to extend for an addi tional three years, to June 30, 1967, the $75 million a year federal aid to airports program. The measure was sent to the House where Commerce Commit tee hearings have been held on a similar bill. The committee has not voted on it. The bill would continuing a matching program which began in 1946. States are required to put up $1 for each federal $1 except in the case of special safety aids such as high intensity runway lighting. For these, Washington pays up to 75 per cent. The bulk of the federal funds are used for runways. The grants can not be spent on passenger ter minal facilities, parking lots, and restaurants. Three-fourths of the money is allocated to the states on the basis of population and area with Alaska eligible for the biggest share, $3,994,844, and Delaware the smallest, $78,332. One-fourth is placed in a dis cretionary fund to be allocated by the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Agency. Ten Non-Communist Countries Increase Trade with Cuba WASHINGTON UP) — Ten of 26 non-Communist countries increased their trade with Cuba last year despite a U.S. campaign to isolate the Castro regime. Japan led the way, supplanting the United States as the largest non-Communist trader with Cuba. Japanese trade increased from $36.1 million in 1961 to 546.4 mil lion last year. Others showing an increase were Morocco, the United Arab Republic, Tunisia, Greece, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Uruguay and Brazil. Didn't Miss the Wedding MIAMI, Fla. L-F — George Kopp, seriously injured Aug. 13 in an automobile accident, vowed he would attend his daughters’ double wedding “If I have to crawl down the aisle.” Instead, he rode in a wheel chair Sunday. The cast on his crushed left leg decorated with white chry santhemums and sprigs of green ery. Beside him stood his wife Ruth, 54, her dislocated left elbow in a sling. His daughters Susan, 23, and Janet, 20, paused to kiss him on their way to the altar. YESTERDAY'S BASBALL American League Minesota 5. Baltimore 3 Detroit 11-4, Kansas City 5-3 Boston 8-1, Cleveland 3-2 Washington 4, Los Angeles 1 New York 4-1, Chicago 0-2 National League Los Angeles 2, Milwaukee 1 Cicinnati 8, San Frencisco 7 Huston 3, St. Louis 1 Chicago 3, New York 1 Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 2 Pacific Coast League San Diego 3-5, Tacoma 2-7 Dallas-Ft. Worth 6-2, Denver 2-0 Portland 5-3, Seattle 2-2 Oklahoma City 4, Salt Lake City 2 Hawaii 4, Spokane 0 Looking at the Weather Mostly cloudy. Low tonight 35, high tomorrow 45. In the last 24 hours: High of 40, low of 36. Max. wind 21 mph from the NW. Sunrise at 4:24 a.m., sun set at 7:41 p.m. Shroud of Secrecy Lifted on Launching Of Polaris Missiles CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Ufl — The Defense Department has lift ed its 29-month-old shroud of secrecy on submarine launchings of the Polaris missile, and the Navy and newsmen are pleased. The news blackout was imposed in March, 1961, when submarine launched Polaris rockets were having numerous problems. Four submarines had logged ten suc cesses and eignt failures. The Defense Department said merely that military missiles launched "away from public view” would not be reported. Of the 41 Polaris missiles launch ed from submarines during the in formation blackout, 33 were suc cessful. The Navy was frustrated because it could not report officially on a program that was progressing well. Combined insistence by the Navy and reporters resulted in removal of the ban. With the lifting of the restriction, Friday, the Navy reported that 45 of 61 Polaris launchings by 12 submarines have been successful. JOHN CATES NAMED DIRECTOR OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT JUNEAU Ufi — The appointment of John Cates of Noorvik as Di rector of the Office of Rural De velopment was announced today by Gov. Wm. Egan. Cates, 47, replaces Robert Hoff man, who resigned to take a po sition with the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Cates, who will assume his new duties Sept. 4, now is teacher prin cipal at the Bureau of Indian Af fairs School at Noorvik. Prior to taking the Noorvik as signment last June, Cates taught at the BIA school at Kwigillingok. U.S. Crime Rale Higher WASHINGTON OR — FBI figures released today show crime in the nation for the first six months of the year was 9 per cent higher than in the first half of 1962. There was a 13 per cent increase in larceny, a 9 per cent rise in auto theft, and increases of 8 and 1 per cent in burglary and robbery, re spectively. Mother and Baby Doing Well BRISBANE, Australia OR — The pilot set the controls of his twin engined Cessna aircraft on auto matic and helped deliver a baby, 5,000 feet above North Queensland today. He was flying Mrs. Gertrude Gordon from an aboriginal mission nearly 100 miles to Cairns Hospital as part of an erial ambulance serv as part of an aerial ambulance service. As the plane headed for Cairns, the pilot, Percy Trezise, father of four, helped ambulance bearer Andrew Cousar deliver a 7-pound boy. Mother and baby are doing well. Canadian Heal Wave VANCOUVER, B.C. oR — Most of Canada was refreshingly cool Sunday, but the far north was in a sweat. It was heat wave time in a part of the country that often reports temperatures of 60 and 70 de grees below zero during the win ter. The Weather Office here today reported Sunday’s high in White horse, Y.T., was 81 aove and in Inuvik, N.W.T., 83 above. The weatherman blamed long hours of sunshine combined with a high pressure ridge of warm air.